A small trickle of water flows from a pipe into the mostly dry spillway below Kent Lake. (Mark Andrew Boyer/KQED)

As we said earlier this week, California’s drought has entered the “what drought?” phase. After a few weeks of rain, much of the Bay Area looks like it might during any other winter, never mind that we just came through the driest 13 months since people began keeping precipitation records in this part of the world. The crisis everyone says we’re in — to some extent it just doesn’t look or feel real.

Take the Marin Municipal Water District as an example. At the beginning of February, its seven reservoirs were, collectively, just half-full. In the last five weeks, about two feet of rain has fallen at the district’s Lake Lagunitas. Reservoir levels have risen to 74 percent of capacity. The district now says it believes it can make it through to next winter without mandatory rationing. And with reservoirs still well below average and the end of the rainy season approaching, the district cautions customers they’re not out of the drought “danger zone” yet.

KQED News photographer Mark Andrew Boyer visited two of the district’s biggest reservoirs, Kent Lake and Nicasio Reservoir, this week and brought back these brief video portraits of conditions there.